On Sun, 2012-08-05 at 22:20 +0200, Robin Gareus wrote: > I really wonder why you are all raving about this. Take a look at your own NB [1]. > Disable PCI and/or PCIe power-management in the BIOS and also disable > EIST and C1E halt-states; and, the 'ondemand' governor will works just fine. There's no PCI/PCIe power-management option and no EIST for my BIOS. C1E already was disabled. > If you have an unlimited supply of power and noise of cooling > the system is of no concern: sure, use the 'performance' CPU-freq > governor -- reducing the number of possibilities in complex systems > usually increases reliability... which is indeed a good thing for audio. ! Regards, Ralf [1] > NB. frequency scaling _can_ be an issue when using jack2 (or tschak) on > a multi-core machine: The total system-load (over all CPUs) may still be > too low for the CPU governor to react, while DSP load is already at the > limit. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user